Battery
15 Answers 55 Score |
How to stop the annoying moisture detected at the USB charging port. |
4 Answers 32 Score |
I dropped my phone on the floor, the screen became black still working |
22 Answers 129 Score |
data and text work fine. Can not make or receive phone calls |
2 Answers 19 Score |
I dropped my phone and it hit the front screen now theres colors lines |
Documents
Parts
Tools
These are some common tools used to work on this device. You might not need every tool for every procedure.
Background and Identification
In 1977, Samsung Electronics launched its Telecommunication Network. Samsung released its first built-in car phone, the SC-100, in 1986, but was considered a failure because of its poor quality. Samsung’s Wireless Development Team purchased ten Motorola mobile phones for benchmarking purposes, and Samsung Electronics produced its first analog mobile phone, the SH100, in 1988. Since then, Samsung phones have included handphones, mono and color flip phones, and AMOLED smartphones.
Samsung released its first CDMA (code-division multiple access) digital mobile phone in March 1996, called the SCH-100. By developing light, slim phones that enabled clear voice communication, Samsung became a leader in the Personal Communications Service (PCS) market. Samsung marketed their mobile phones towards young generations, who has emerged as a growing customer base. By 1999, Samsung held more than 50-percent of the worldwide CDMA mobile phone market.
Samsung’s first AMOLED (Active Matrix Organic Light-Emitting Diode) mobile phone was released in 2009 as the first Samsung phone to feature a touch screen display. The Galaxy S phone was introduced in 2010 as the first in a very long line of Galaxy mobile phones. The first Galaxy S phone included mobile streaming, video editing, imaging, and YouTube capabilities. Samsung smartphones use the Android operating system produced by Google.
Identifying your Samsung phone is as simple as removing the back cover and reading the label underneath the battery, or looking near the bottom of the back case.
The most often replaced Samsung Cell Phone parts include the battery, screen, and rear glass panel/cover.
A-Series
J-Series
M-Series
S-Series
Note-Series
Additional Information
- Wikipedia: Samsung Telecommunications
- GMSArena: All Samsung Phones
- PCMag: Samsung’s Smartphone History
- iFixit: List of Troubleshooting Guides